The Arabs and Their Qur'an - Paperback
The Arabs and Their Qur'an - Paperback
$47.50
/
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by David R. Ross (Author)
What did it mean to be a Believer? What was the Qur'an, and what did it intend by "in the tongue of the Arabs"? In the first century of the Mhaggr y , these "emigrants" into the Near East debated the very meaning of their faith. The essays in this book describe the world of the Arabs and their Qur'an. This was a different world than the world which the S ra describes. In this world, Medina was one of several centers in Arabian culture, and Mecca was known only to traders in leather. The "Arab" was a Bedouin poet, and his "Qur'an" was a verse recital - not always religious in origin. The Marw nid amirs chose from all the qur'ans and from them built a written collection: "the Furq n". Even after that, the Arab poets continued to compose verse Qur'ans, sometimes in reaction to the Furq n.